The U.N. warned Tuesday that post-election violence in Zimbabwe was
rising to near crisis levels ahead of a planned presidential run-off, with
opposition supporters enduring the brunt of attacks, AFP reports. The statement
followed opposition leader’s Morgan Tsvangirai move to return home to contest
the election with veteran President Robert Mugabe.
Agustino Zacarias, the UN’s resident representative in Zimbabwe,
told reporters that violence appeared to be directed against followers of the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). “There is an emerging pattern
of political violence inflicted mainly but not exclusively on rural supporters
of the MDC,” Zacarias said, quoted by the same source.
“The United Nations country team urges all political leaders
across the political divide to unequivocally renounce politically-motivated
violence,” he added.
It appears that the U.S.
called for Mugabe’s government to guarantee the safety of Tsvangirai when he
arrives back in Harare.
However, the government said the MDC leader had no reason to fear for his
safety.
Meanwhile, it seems that computer hackers attacked the
website of Zimbabwe’s state-owned Herald newspaper, BBC News reports. The site
has been shut down since Saturday and the visitors are being redirected to the
website of the state-owned Sunday Mail newspaper. “We are still waiting for our
service providers to give us feedback,” the company’s IT Manager, Thomson Ndovihe
said “but we should be up and running by tomorrow”.
The Herald in known as the official mouthpiece of Mugabe’s
ruling Zanu-PF party.
According to Zimbabwe’s
Electoral Commission, the second round may be delayed due to logistical
problems. The first round was largely peaceful, but the results were not
announced until 2 May.
The 84-year-old President Mugabe ruled uninterrupted since Zimbabwe’s
independence in 1980. Currently, the former British colony is dealing with the
world’s highest rate of inflation and an unemployment level that reached the 80
percent mark. Mugabe accused the E.U. for his country’s economic collapse.